I heart Mattilda aka Matt Bernstein Sycamore. Really, enough said. This is a decidedly fanfuckingtastic anthology of piece on anti-assimilationist queer politics.
I recently started reading these 1950's lesbian pulp fiction books and totally got hooked. I'm reading all the books by Ann Bannon--the 'queen' of lesbian pulp fiction. While apparently not all the books in the genre are of such high quality, I am really enjoying Bannon's series. Still easy to relate to today, and definitely an interesting piece of historical fiction.
I've been studying the cultural and economic politics of childbirth in the U.S. for several years now and as I'm doing my master's project in the topic, I bought this to build a lit review on the medical administration/business side of it all. It's yet to be seen if I actually learn any new information from this text.

When I first learned about community based participatory research I knew that it was exactly what kind of research I wanted to do. I bought this text to get some references for a colleague who is doing work with a food and fitness policy council in the city I work in, but I will no doubt use it in my own work.
When I first learned about community based participatory research I knew that it was exactly what kind of research I wanted to do. I bought this text to get some references for a colleague who is doing work with a food and fitness policy council in the city I work in, but I will no doubt use it in my own work.
2 comments:
the revolting book made me feel so good. I secretly read more than half of it that night I slept over.
Oh, how lovely to see that you (and Tyler) are enjoying That's Revolting!
Love --
mattilda
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